# Accelerationism

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{{Short description|Ideologies of change via capitalism and technology}}
{{For|the white supremacist movement|Militant accelerationism}}
{{For|the concept from future studies|Accelerating change}}
{{For|the concept of time in late modernity by sociologist Hartmut Rosa|Social acceleration}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2025}}

{{Transhumanism|Variants}}

'''Accelerationism''' is a range of [ideologies](/source/ideologies) that call for the use of [capitalism](/source/capitalism) and associated processes to create radical social transformations.<ref name="New Statesman-2016">{{Cite web |date=5 August 2016 |title=What is accelerationism? |url=https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2016/08/what-accelerationism |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160806140736/http://www.newstatesman.com:80/politics/uk/2016/08/what-accelerationism |archive-date=6 August 2016 |access-date=5 January 2021 |website=New Statesman}}</ref> Broadly, accelerationism engages with [antihumanism](/source/antihumanism),<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /><ref name="Fluss-2022" /> as well as [posthumanism](/source/posthumanism),<ref name="Noys-2022">{{cite book |last1=Noys |first1=Benjamin |title=Palgrave Handbook of Critical Posthumanism |date=2022 |publisher=[Springer International Publishing](/source/Springer_International_Publishing) |isbn=978-3-030-42681-1 |pages=1–18 |language=en |chapter=Accelerationism: Adventures in Speed |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-42681-1_58-1 |chapter-url=https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-42681-1_58-1}}</ref> and seeks to accelerate desired tendencies within capitalism at the expense of negative ones, though variants differ greatly on which tendencies and if this will lead beyond capitalism or further into it.<ref name=":5" />

Accelerationism originated from ideas from philosophers such as [Gilles Deleuze](/source/Gilles_Deleuze) and [Félix Guattari](/source/F%C3%A9lix_Guattari), who speculated in the 1970s that emancipatory forces within capitalism, particularly [deterritorialization](/source/deterritorialization), could be radicalized against it and its oppressive aspects.<ref name=":5" /><ref name="Le-2018a" /> Inspired by these ideas, some [University of Warwick](/source/University_of_Warwick) faculty and students formed a philosophy collective known as the [Cybernetic Culture Research Unit](/source/Cybernetic_Culture_Research_Unit) (CCRU) in the 1990s, led by [Nick Land](/source/Nick_Land).<ref name="Beckett-2017">{{Cite web |last=Beckett |first=Andy |date=11 May 2017 |title=Accelerationism: how a fringe philosophy predicted the future we live in |url=http://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/11/accelerationism-how-a-fringe-philosophy-predicted-the-future-we-live-in |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170511050642/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/11/accelerationism-how-a-fringe-philosophy-predicted-the-future-we-live-in |archive-date=11 May 2017 |access-date=5 January 2021 |website=The Guardian |language=en |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> Land and the CCRU drew upon contemporary media and culture such as [cyberpunk](/source/cyberpunk) and [jungle music](/source/jungle_music) to further develop these ideas<ref name="Cisneros-2014">{{cite web |last=Jiménez de Cisneros |first=Roc |date=5 November 2014 |title=The Accelerationist Vertigo (II): Interview with Robin Mackay |url=https://lab.cccb.org/en/the-accelerationist-vertigo-ii-interview-with-robin-mackay/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190818150741/https://lab.cccb.org/en/the-accelerationist-vertigo-ii-interview-with-robin-mackay/ |archive-date=18 August 2019 |access-date=5 February 2015 |publisher=[Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona](/source/Centre_de_Cultura_Contempor%C3%A0nia_de_Barcelona)}}</ref> in a [right-wing](/source/right-wing), pro-capitalist manner.<ref name=":5" /> They theorized a self-revolutionizing capitalism that would culminate in a [technological singularity](/source/technological_singularity), resulting in [artificial intelligence](/source/artificial_intelligence) surpassing and eliminating humanity,<ref name="Le-2018a" /> though they drifted from these ideas and dissolved by the 2000s.<ref name="Beckett-2017" />

In the 2010s, the movement was termed ''accelerationism'' by [Benjamin Noys](/source/Benjamin_Noys) in a critical work,<ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /> followed by a renewed interest in its ideas.<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> Thinkers such as [Nick Srnicek](/source/Nick_Srnicek) and Alex Williams advocated a [left-wing](/source/Left-wing_politics) accelerationism based on embracing capitalist technology and infrastructure to move past a stagnant capitalism,<ref name="Shaviro-2015" /> exploring themes such as [automation](/source/automation) of work.<ref name="Noys-2022" /> This was associated with ''Prometheanism'', which engaged with ideas such as [rationalism](/source/rationalism),<ref name=":5" /> posthumanism,<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> and a rejection of limits on change.<ref name="Gureev-2018" /> Land, having moved to [China](/source/China), also engaged with the [Dark Enlightenment](/source/Dark_Enlightenment) movement as part of his right-wing accelerationism, rejecting [egalitarianism](/source/egalitarianism) and [democracy](/source/democracy) in favor of [CEO](/source/CEO)-run states to promote the singularity.<ref name="Beauchamp-2019">{{cite news |author=Beauchamp |first=Zack |date=18 November 2019 |title=Accelerationism: the obscure idea inspiring white supremacist killers around the world |url=https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/11/11/20882005/accelerationism-white-supremacy-christchurch |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250210123938/https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/2019/11/11/20882005/accelerationism-white-supremacy-christchurch |archive-date=10 February 2025 |access-date=17 September 2020 |work=[Vox](/source/Vox_(website)) |publisher=[Vox Media](/source/Vox_Media)}}</ref> [Effective accelerationism](/source/Effective_accelerationism) arose with influence from [effective altruism](/source/effective_altruism) to promote technological progress and [artificial general intelligence](/source/artificial_general_intelligence) to solve human problems,<ref name=":52">{{Cite web |last=Soufi |first=Daniel |date=2024-01-06 |title='Accelerate or die,' the controversial ideology that proposes the unlimited advance of artificial intelligence |url=https://english.elpais.com/technology/2024-01-06/accelerate-or-die-the-controversial-ideology-that-proposes-the-unlimited-advance-of-artificial-intelligence.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240120202224/https://english.elpais.com/technology/2024-01-06/accelerate-or-die-the-controversial-ideology-that-proposes-the-unlimited-advance-of-artificial-intelligence.html |archive-date=20 January 2024 |access-date=2024-01-20 |website=[El País](/source/El_Pa%C3%ADs) |language=en-us}}</ref> and ascend the [Kardashev scale](/source/Kardashev_scale).<ref name="Torres-2023" />

Various other meanings for the term also emerged, such as to worsen capitalism to promote [revolution](/source/revolution) against it,<ref name="Haider-2017" /> as well as by [far-right extremists](/source/far-right_extremists) promoting [racial violence](/source/racial_violence) and the [collapse of society](/source/collapse_of_society) in order to establish a [white ethnostate](/source/white_ethnostate) ([militant accelerationism](/source/militant_accelerationism)).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cfr.org/in-brief/year-after-january-6-accelerationism-new-terrorist-threat|title=A Year After January 6, Is Accelerationism the New Terrorist Threat?|publisher=[Council on Foreign Relations](/source/Council_on_Foreign_Relations)|date=5 January 2022|access-date=15 July 2024}}</ref>

== Background ==
The history of accelerationism has been divided into three waves. First, there were the late 1960s and early 1970s French [post-Marxists](/source/Post-Marxism) such as [Gilles Deleuze](/source/Gilles_Deleuze), [Félix Guattari](/source/F%C3%A9lix_Guattari), [Jean-François Lyotard](/source/Jean-Fran%C3%A7ois_Lyotard), and [Jean Baudrillard](/source/Jean_Baudrillard), whose thought arose in the wake of [May 68](/source/May_68).<ref name="Cole-2022" /><ref name="Sellar-2017" /><ref name="Haynes-2021" /> According to David R. Cole, texts produced during this period had little effect "other than as perhaps scattered art practices", with the result being that "capitalism has emerged as triumphant in the past 50 years, and the idealism of the student 1968 revolution in Paris has subsequently faded."<ref name="Cole-2022">{{Cite journal |last=Cole |first=David R. |date=16 May 2022 |title=Anti-Oedipus in the Anthropocene: Education and the deterritorializing machine |url= |journal=Educational Philosophy & Theory |volume=56 |issue=3 |pages=285–297 |doi=10.1080/00131857.2022.2129006 |via=[EBSCO Information Services](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)|doi-access=free }}</ref> The second wave arose in the 1990s with the work of Nick Land and the CCRU, with the third being the Promethean left-accelerationism of the 2010s.<ref name="Cole-2022"></ref><ref name="Sellar-2017">{{Cite journal |last1=Sellar |first1=Sam |last2=Cole |first2=David |date=10 January 2017 |title=Accelerationism: a timely provocation for the critical sociology of education |journal=British Journal of Sociology of Education |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=38–48 |doi=10.1080/01425692.2016.1256190 }}</ref><ref name="Haynes-2021" />
=== Influences and precursors ===
The term ''accelerationism'' was previously used in [Roger Zelazny](/source/Roger_Zelazny)'s 1967 novel ''[Lord of Light](/source/Lord_of_Light)''.<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref>{{Cite web |date=21 November 2014 |title=Every Which Way but Loose |url=https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/every-way-loose/ |access-date=14 September 2024 |website=Los Angeles Review of Books}}</ref> It was later popularized by professor and author [Benjamin Noys](/source/Benjamin_Noys) in his 2010 book ''The Persistence of the Negative'' to describe the trajectory of certain [post-structuralists](/source/post-structuralists) who embraced unorthodox [Marxist](/source/Marxist) and counter-Marxist overviews of capitalist growth, such as [Deleuze and Guattari](/source/Deleuze_and_Guattari) in their 1972 book ''[Anti-Oedipus](/source/Anti-Oedipus)'', Lyotard in his 1974 book ''[Libidinal Economy](/source/Libidinal_Economy)'' and Baudrillard in his 1976 book ''Symbolic Exchange and Death''.<ref name="Noys-2010">{{cite book |last=Noys |first=Benjamin |title=The Persistence of the Negative: A Critique of Contemporary Continental Theory |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |year=2010 |page=5 |jstor=j.ctt1r276g}}</ref><ref name="Shaviro-2015">{{Cite book |last=Shaviro |first=Steven |url=https://manifold.umn.edu/read/no-speed-limit/section/1b09b41b-002e-4b2d-ade0-b7ee76e5e9cc |title=No Speed Limit: Three Essays on Accelerationism |date=30 January 2015 |publisher=[University of Minnesota Press](/source/University_of_Minnesota_Press) |isbn=9780816697670 |language=en |chapter=Introduction to Accelerationism}}</ref><ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /> Noys later stated "at this point, what we can call accelerationism is dedicated to trying to ride these forces of capitalist production and direct them to destabilize capitalism itself."<ref name="Noys-2022" />

Patrick Gamez considers the French thinkers' [philosophy of desire](/source/philosophy_of_desire) to be a rejection of [orthodox Marxism](/source/orthodox_Marxism) and [psychoanalysis](/source/psychoanalysis), particularly in Deleuze and Guattari's ''[Capitalism and Schizophrenia](/source/Capitalism_and_Schizophrenia)''. Particularly influential is Deleuze and Guattari's concept of [desiring-production](/source/desiring-production); rather than viewing human desire as a lack that is satiated by consumption, they view it as an inhuman flow of productive energy, having no proper organization or purpose. Any [normativity](/source/normativity) or [functionalism](/source/Functionalism_(philosophy_of_mind)) comes from flows of desire performing work and territorializing until new flows of desire override them in the process of [deterritorialization](/source/deterritorialization) and [reterritorialization](/source/reterritorialization).<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> 

Vincent Le notes that Deleuze and Guattari's model is based on machines; as machines are assemblages of different parts which perform different functions, humans and social bodies are [assemblages](/source/Assemblage_(philosophy)) of "organs" which produce desires. They find capitalism to be the most radically deterritorializing process in history, as it is based on constant deterritorialization rather than a stable code of desire. Le uses the example of sex and food; they are no longer coded only for marriage and sustenance, but rather as commodities which produce other desires. While capitalism tends toward the [body without organs](/source/body_without_organs), or a state without determinate functions or coded desires, it never reaches that state, as it causes reterritorialization by recoding things as commodity for sale, to be deterritorialized again.<ref name="Le-2018a" /><ref name="Le-2018b" /> 

[Mark Fisher](/source/Mark_Fisher) describes Deleuze and Guattari's model of capitalism as defined by the tension between destroying and re-establishing boundaries, with the inclusion of new and archaic elements seen "where food banks co-exist with iPhones."<ref name="Fisher-2017" /> Gamez describes Land's thought as influenced by the French thinkers' [antihumanism](/source/antihumanism), as well as their ambivalence or even celebration of capitalism's destroying of traditional hierarchies and freeing of desire.<ref name="Gamez-2025b" />

Land cited a number of philosophers who expressed anticipatory accelerationist attitudes in his 2017 essay "A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism".<ref name="Land-2017">{{Cite web |last=Land |first=Nick |date=25 May 2017 |title=A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism |url=https://jacobitemag.com/2017/05/25/a-quick-and-dirty-introduction-to-accelerationism/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180113012817/https://jacobitemag.com/2017/05/25/a-quick-and-dirty-introduction-to-accelerationism/ |archive-date=13 January 2018 |access-date=20 February 2018 |work=Jacobite}}</ref><ref name="Chistyakov-2022">{{cite journal |last1=Chistyakov |first1=Denis I. |last2=Игоревич |first2=Чистяков Денис |date=2022 |title=Philosophy of Accelerationism: A New Way of Comprehending the Present Social Reality (in Nick Land's Context) |journal=RUDN Journal of Philosophy |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=687–696 |doi=10.22363/2313-2302-2022-26-3-687-696 |doi-access=free}}</ref> Firstly, [Friedrich Nietzsche](/source/Friedrich_Nietzsche) argued in a fragment in ''[The Will to Power](/source/The_Will_to_Power_(manuscript))'' that "the [leveling process](/source/Leveling_(philosophy)) of European man is the great process which should not be checked: one should even accelerate it."<ref>{{cite book |last=Strong |first=Tracy |year=1988 |title=Friedrich Nietzsche and the Politics of Transfiguration |url=https://archive.org/details/friedrichnietzsc00stro_449 |url-access=limited |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |page= 211}}</ref><ref name="Land-2017" /><ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /> Taking inspiration from this notion for ''Anti-Oedipus'', Deleuze and Guattari speculated further on an unprecedented "revolutionary path" to perpetuate capitalism's tendencies, a passage which is cited as a central inspiration for accelerationism:<ref name="Noys-2022" /><ref name="Fisher-2014" /><ref name="Haider-2017" />

{{blockquote|But which is the revolutionary path? Is there one?—To withdraw from the world market, as [Samir Amin](/source/Samir_Amin) advises Third World countries to do, in a curious revival of the fascist "economic solution"? Or might it be to go in the opposite direction? To go still further, that is, in the movement of the market, of [decoding](/source/Decoding_(semiotics)) and deterritorialization? For perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized enough, not decoded enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and a practice of a highly schizophrenic character. Not to withdraw from the process, but to go further, to "accelerate the process," as Nietzsche put it: in this matter, the truth is that we haven't seen anything yet.|author=Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari|title=''Anti-Oedipus''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Deleuze |first1=Gilles |last2=Guattari |first2=Félix |year=2004 |title=Anti-Oedipus |location=London |publisher=Continuum |page= 260}}</ref>}}

Fisher describes Land's interpretation of this passage as explicitly [anti-Marxist](/source/anti-Marxist).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Fisher |first=Mark |date=June 2013 |title="A social and psychic revolution of almost inconceivable magnitude": Popular Culture's Interrupted Accelerationist Dreams - Journal #46 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60084/a-social-and-psychic-revolution-of-almost-inconceivable-magnitude-popular-culture-s-interrupted-accelerationist-dreams |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250429093121/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60084/a-social-and-psychic-revolution-of-almost-inconceivable-magnitude-popular-culture-s-interrupted-accelerationist-dreams/ |archive-date=29 April 2025 |access-date=29 October 2025 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}</ref> Land cited [Karl Marx](/source/Karl_Marx), who, in his 1848 speech "On the Question of Free Trade", anticipated accelerationist principles a century before Deleuze and Guattari by describing [free trade](/source/free_trade) as socially destructive and fuelling [class conflict](/source/class_conflict), then effectively arguing for it:<ref name="Land-2017" /><ref name="Chistyakov-2022" />

{{blockquote|But, in general, the protective system of our day is conservative, while the free trade system is destructive. It breaks up old nationalities and pushes the antagonism of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie to the extreme point. In a word, the free trade system hastens the social revolution. It is in this revolutionary sense alone, gentlemen, that I vote in favor of free trade.|author=Karl Marx|title="On the Question of Free Trade"<ref>{{Cite book |title=Karl Marx: Selected Writings | editor1=David McLellan  | date=2000 | page= 296 | publisher= Oxford University Press| isbn= 9780198782650}}</ref>}}

Robin Mackay and [Armen Avanessian](/source/Armen_Avanessian) note "Fragment on Machines" from ''[Grundrisse](/source/Grundrisse)'' as Marx's "most openly accelerationist writing".<ref name="Mackay-2014">{{Cite book |last1=Mackay |first1=Robin |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2=Avanessian |first2=Armen |date=May 2014 |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |location=United Kingdom |pages=1–46 |language=en |chapter=Introduction |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref> Noys states of Marx's influence, "it favors the Marx who celebrates the powers of capitalism, most evident in ''[The Communist Manifesto](/source/The_Communist_Manifesto)'' (cowritten with [Engels](/source/Engels)), over the Marx who also stresses the difficulty of transcending and escaping capital, the Marx of ''[Capital](/source/Das_Kapital)''", also characterizing the accelerationist view of Marx as filtered through Nietzsche.<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Sam Sellar and Cole state that while he was dismissive of Marxists, Land studied works such as ''Capital'' and ''Grundrusse'' as "exemplary analyses of how capital works".<ref name="Sellar-2017" />

Sellar and Cole attribute Land's ideas to [continental philosophers](/source/continental_philosophers) such as [Immanuel Kant](/source/Immanuel_Kant), [Arthur Schopenhauer](/source/Arthur_Schopenhauer), Nietzsche, [Martin Heidegger](/source/Martin_Heidegger), [Georges Bataille](/source/Georges_Bataille), and Deleuze.<ref name="Sellar-2017" /> Paul Haynes notes Bataille's concepts of [general economy and excess](/source/The_Accursed_Share),<ref name="Haynes-2021" /> which Land wrote about for ''The Thirst for Annihilation'',<ref name=":0" /> and [McKenzie Wark](/source/McKenzie_Wark) notes Bataille's solar economy as key to Land along with a non-[vitalist](/source/Vitalism) interpretation of Deleuze and Guattari.<ref name=":3">{{Cite web |last=Wark |first=McKenzie |date=June 19, 2017 |title=On Nick Land |url=https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3284-on-nick-land |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250807230420/https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3284-on-nick-land?srsltid=AfmBOoqtIALN17iQXhAS7x8cyxwTv1MesT7lhL9cpmRJSXZgkX3xvAKR |archive-date=August 7, 2025 |access-date=2025-08-07 |website=Verso |language=en}}</ref> Fisher notes the same excerpt from ''Anti-Oedipus'' as Land, along with a section from ''Libidinal Economy'' which he describes as "the one passage from the text that is remembered, if only in notoriety", as "immediately [giving] the flavour of the accelerationist gambit":<ref name="Fisher-2014" />{{Blockquote|text=The English unemployed did not have to become workers to survive, they – hang on tight and spit on me – enjoyed the hysterical, masochistic, whatever exhaustion it was of hanging on in the mines, in the foundries, in the factories, in hell, they enjoyed it, enjoyed the mad destruction of their organic body which was indeed imposed upon them, they enjoyed the decomposition of their personal identity, the identity that the peasant tradition had constructed for them, enjoyed the dissolutions of their families and villages, and enjoyed the new monstrous anonymity of the suburbs and the pubs in morning and evening.|author=Jean-François Lyotard|title=''Libidinal Economy''}}

[Nick Srnicek](/source/Nick_Srnicek) and Alex Williams additionally credit [Vladimir Lenin](/source/Vladimir_Lenin) with recognizing that the development of capitalist forces was important in the subsequent foundation of a [socialist](/source/Socialism) system:<ref name="Williams-2013">{{cite web |last1=Williams |first1=Alex |last2=Srnicek |first2=Nick |date=14 May 2013 |title=#ACCELERATE MANIFESTO for an Accelerationist Politics |url=http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/05/14/accelerate-manifesto-for-an-accelerationist-politics/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150206222219/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/05/14/accelerate-manifesto-for-an-accelerationist-politics/ |archive-date=6 February 2015 |access-date=5 February 2015 |publisher=Critical Legal Thinking}}</ref><ref name="Srnicek-2014" />

{{Blockquote|text=Socialism is inconceivable without large-scale capitalist engineering based on the latest discoveries of modern science. It is inconceivable without planned state organisation which keeps tens of millions of people to the strictest observance of a unified standard in production and distribution. We Marxists have always spoken of this, and it is not worth while wasting two seconds talking to people who do not understand even this ([anarchists](/source/anarchists) and a good half of the [Left Socialist-Revolutionaries](/source/Left_Socialist-Revolutionaries)).|author=Vladimir Lenin|title="'Left Wing' Childishness"}}

Accelerationism was also influenced by [science fiction](/source/science_fiction) (particularly [cyberpunk](/source/cyberpunk)) and [electronic dance music](/source/electronic_dance_music) (particularly [jungle](/source/Jungle_music)).<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Cisneros-2014" /><ref name="Wilson-2017" /><ref name="Noys-2022" /> ''[Neuromancer](/source/Neuromancer)'' and [its trilogy](/source/Sprawl_trilogy) are a major influence,<ref name=":2" /><ref name="Mackay-2014" /><ref name=":22" /> with [Iain Hamilton Grant](/source/Iain_Hamilton_Grant) stating "''Neuromancer'' got into the philosophy department, and it went viral. You'd find worn-out paperbacks all over the common room."<ref name="Beckett-2017" /> Fisher states of Land's "theory-fictions" from the 1990s, "They weren't distanced readings of [French theory](/source/French_theory) so much as [cybergoth](/source/cybergoth)ic remixes which put Deleuze and Guattari on the same plane as films such as ''[Apocalypse Now](/source/Apocalypse_Now)'' and fictions such as [Gibson](/source/William_Gibson)'s ''Neuromancer''."<ref name="Wilson-2017" /> Fisher and Mackay additionally note ''[Terminator](/source/The_Terminator)'', ''[Predator](/source/Predator_(film))'', and ''[Blade Runner](/source/Blade_Runner)'' as particular sci-fi works which influenced accelerationism, particularly through jungle music which [sampled](/source/Sampling_(music)) from such movies.<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /><ref name="Wilson-2017" /> Mackay also notes [Russian cosmism](/source/Russian_cosmism) and ''[Erewhon](/source/Erewhon)'' as influences,<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> while Noys notes [Donna Haraway](/source/Donna_Haraway)'s work on [cyborg](/source/cyborg)s.<ref name="Noys-2022" /> [H. P. Lovecraft](/source/H._P._Lovecraft) has also been noted as an influence, with Land drawing upon such work in the 1990s<ref name="Noys-2022" /> and later in the 2010s.<ref name=":22" /><ref name=":4" /> [Cybernetics](/source/Cybernetics) has been noted as an influence on both Land<ref name="Le-2018a" /> and left-accelerationism,<ref name="Gardiner-2020" /> with Gamez tracing this to [neoliberals](/source/Neoliberalism) such as [Friedrich Hayek](/source/Friedrich_Hayek) being interested in cybernetics and the [self-organization](/source/self-organization) of markets; as well as socialists such as [Oskar Lange](/source/Oskar_Lange) who sought to use cybernetic computers to address the [socialist calculation debate](/source/socialist_calculation_debate).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gamez |first=Patrick |title=Posthumanism Meets Surveillance Capitalism |date=31 May 2025 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan, Cham |isbn=978-3-031-90770-8 |language=en |chapter=How to Delete the Manifest Image: A Political Economy of the Mind |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref>

=== Cybernetic Culture Research Unit ===
{{Cybernetic Culture Research Unit}}
The [Cybernetic Culture Research Unit](/source/Cybernetic_Culture_Research_Unit) (CCRU), a philosophy collective at the [University of Warwick](/source/University_of_Warwick) which included Land, Mackay, Fisher and Grant, further developed accelerationism in the 1990s.<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=Schwarz |first1=Jonas Andersson |title=Online File Sharing: Innovations in Media Consumption |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |location=New York |pages=20–21}}</ref><ref name="Cisneros-2014" /><ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> Fisher described the CCRU's accelerationism as "a kind of exuberant anti-politics, a 'technihilo' celebration of the irrelevance of human agency, partly inspired by the pro-[markets](/source/Market_(economics)), anti-capitalism line developed by [Manuel DeLanda](/source/Manuel_DeLanda) out of [Braudel](/source/Braudel), and from the section of Anti-Oedipus that talks about marketization as the 'revolutionary path'."<ref name="Wilson-2017">{{Cite web |last=Wilson |first=Rowan |date=16 January 2017 |title=They Can Be Different in the Future Too: Mark Fisher interviewed |url=https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3051-they-can-be-different-in-the-future-too-mark-fisher-interviewed |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250217195507/https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3051-they-can-be-different-in-the-future-too-mark-fisher-interviewed |archive-date=17 February 2025 |access-date=20 February 2025 |website=Verso Books |language=en}}</ref> The group stood in stark opposition to the University of Warwick and traditional left-wing academia,<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Wilson-2017" /> with Mackay stating "I don't think Land has ever pretended to be left-wing! He's a serious philosopher and an intelligent thinker, but one who has always loved to bait the left by presenting the 'worst' possible scenario with great delight...!"<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> As Land became a stronger influence on the group and left the University of Warwick, they would shift to more unorthodox and [occult](/source/occult) ideas. Land suffered a [breakdown](/source/Mental_breakdown) from his [amphetamine abuse](/source/amphetamine_abuse) and disappeared in the early 2000s, with the CCRU vanishing along with him.<ref name="Beckett-2017" />

=== Popularization ===
Accelerationism emerged again in the 2010s,<ref name=":6">{{Cite book |last=Sellar |first=Sam |title=Education and Technological Unemployment |date=30 April 2019 |publisher=Springer Singapore |isbn=978-981-13-6225-5 |edition=1 |location=Singapore |pages=131-144 |chapter=Acceleration, Automation and Pedagogy: How the Prospect of Technological Unemployment Creates New Conditions for Educational Thought}}</ref> with Mackay crediting the publishing of ''[Fanged Noumena](/source/Fanged_Noumena)'', a 2011 anthology of Land's work, with an emergence of new accelerationist thinking. In 2014, Mackay and Avanessian published the anthology ''#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader,''<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> which ''[The Guardian](/source/The_Guardian)'' referred to as "the only proper guide to the movement in existence." They also described ''Fanged Noumena'' as "contain[ing] some of accelerationism's most darkly fascinating passages."<ref name="Beckett-2017" /> In 2015, Urbanomic and Time Spiral Press published ''Writings 1997-2003'' as a complete collection of known texts published under the CCRU name, besides those that have been irrecoverably lost or attributed to a specific member. However, some works under the CCRU name are not included, such as those in ''#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=CCRU |title=Writings 1997–2003 |publisher=Urbanomic, Time Spiral Press |year=2015 |isbn=9780995455061 |location=United Kingdom |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2= |first2= |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |edition=1st |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=May 2014 |pages= |language=en |chapter= |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref> In November 2025, Noys called the movement a "corpse" which had disappeared or been eclipsed by more urgent debates, but found it still relevant in contemporary debates on [large language models](/source/large_language_models) and [artificial intelligence](/source/artificial_intelligence), as well as in the corporate world with [effective accelerationism](/source/effective_accelerationism).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Noys |first=Benjamin |date=14 November 2025 |title=The Corpse of Accelerationism - Notes - e-flux |url=https://www.e-flux.com/notes/6783419/the-corpse-of-accelerationism |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20251205221145/https://www.e-flux.com/notes/6783419/the-corpse-of-accelerationism |archive-date=5 December 2025 |access-date=5 December 2025 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}</ref>

== Concepts ==
Accelerationism consists of various and often contradictory ideas, with Noys stating "part of the difficulty of understanding accelerationism is grasping these shifting meanings and the stakes of particular interventions".<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Avanessian stated "any accelerationist thought is based on the assessment that [contradictions (of capitalism)](/source/Contradiction) must be countered by their own aggravation",<ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /> while Mackay considered a Marxist "acceleration of contradictions" to be a misconception and stated that no accelerationist authors have advocated such a thing.<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> Harrison Fluss and Landon Frim note that accelerationists make extensive use of [neologism](/source/neologism)s, either original or borrowed from continental philosophy. Such terminology can obscure their core arguments, exacerbated by the fact that it can be highly inconsistent between thinkers.<ref name="Fluss-2022" />

=== Posthumanism ===
Accelerationism adheres to [posthumanism](/source/posthumanism) and [antihumanism](/source/antihumanism).<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /><ref name="Shaviro-2015" /><ref name=":1" /> Noys characterizes accelerationism's interest in technology and abstraction as a rejection of [humanism](/source/humanism) and its emphasis on the [human](/source/human); It seeks to transcend or alter humanity's limits through technological integration. According to Noys, it also takes from posthumanism in continental philosophy, such as Nietzsche's vision for the [Übermensch](/source/%C3%9Cbermensch) to create new values and overcome nihilism. Noys finds Nietszche's tone, particularly his criticism of the weak resenting the strong, to be influential on accelerationism's engagement with technology.<ref name="Noys-2022" />

Fluss and Frim characterize accelerationism as adhering to [nominalism](/source/nominalism) in disputing stable essences of nature and humanity, as well as [voluntarism](/source/Voluntarism_(philosophy)) in that the will is radically free to act without natural or mental limitations. According to them, left-accelerationists such as Peter Wolfendale and [Reza Negarestani](/source/Reza_Negarestani) reject the term "antihumanism" in favor of "inhumanism", but their ideas still fit within antihumanism's rejection of a stable human essence. [Ray Brassier](/source/Ray_Brassier) rejects the term "voluntarism," but affirms its idea that the will can act without predetermined limits.<ref name="Fluss-2022" />

==== Prometheanism ====
Prometheanism is a term closely associated with accelerationism,<ref name="Fluss-2022">{{Cite book |last1=Fluss |first1=Harrison |title=Prometheus and Gaia: Technology, Ecology and Anti-Humanism |last2=Frim |first2=Landon |date=March 2022 |publisher=Anthem Press |isbn=9781839980190 |pages= |language=en |chapter= |via=[Cambridge University Press](/source/Cambridge_University_Press)}}</ref><ref name="Hui-2016" /><ref name="Gamez-2025a">{{Cite book |last=Gamez |first=Patrick |title=Posthumanism Meets Surveillance Capitalism |date=31 May 2025 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan, Cham |isbn=978-3-031-90770-8 |location=Notre Dame, IN, USA |language=en |chapter=The Price of Fire |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref> particularly the left-wing variant,<ref name="Cole-2022" /><ref name="Sellar-2017" /><ref name="Gamez-2025b">{{Cite book |last=Gamez |first=Patrick |title=Posthumanism Meets Surveillance Capitalism |date=31 May 2025 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan, Cham |isbn=978-3-031-90770-8 |language=en |chapter=No Rx for NRx |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref> referencing the Greek figure of [Prometheus](/source/Prometheus). Fluss and Frim associate it with posthumanism and using innovation and technology to surpass the limits of humans and [nature](/source/nature).<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> [Yuk Hui](/source/Yuk_Hui) characterizes Prometheanism as "decoupling the social critique of capitalism from denigrating technology and asserting the power of technology to free us from constraints and contradictions or from modernity."<ref name="Hui-2016" /> Patrick Gamez describes it as exalting rationality like [transhumanists](/source/transhumanists), but taking the posthumanist stance of de-prioritizing humans, viewing reason as not exclusive to humanity. He distinguishes this use of the term from [previous usage](/source/Promethean_gap) by [Günther Anders](/source/G%C3%BCnther_Anders) for "our troubling technological condition", as well as by [John Dryzek](/source/John_Dryzek) to describe [an environmental position](/source/Prometheanism), though "they at least share in the spirit" of accelerationist Prometheanism.<ref name="Gamez-2025a" /> Srnicek characterizes it as "the basic political and philosophical belief that there are no immutable givens — there is no transcendental which cannot be altered".<ref name="Gureev-2018">{{Cite web |last=Gureev |first=Artem |date=1 March 2018 |title=Beyond Endless Winter: An Interview with Nick Srnicek |url=https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3652-beyond-endless-winter-an-interview-with-nick-srnicek |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250806155924/https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/news/3652-beyond-endless-winter-an-interview-with-nick-srnicek?srsltid=AfmBOoqGD--v4tCMMKw5wWcu1IpQGz9TuKiGDEFzi7xgONIfxW4kVx_S |archive-date=6 August 2025 |access-date=6 August 2025 |website=Verso |language=en}}</ref>

Brassier's "Prometheanism and its Critics", compiled in ''#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader'', addresses [Jean-Pierre Dupuy](/source/Jean-Pierre_Dupuy)'s [Heideggerean](/source/Heideggerean) critique of [human enhancement](/source/human_enhancement) and transhumanism. Critiquing the distinction between the man-made and the natural as arbitrary and theological, Brassier expresses openness to the possibility of re-engineering human nature and the world through [rationalism](/source/rationalism) instead of accepting them as they are, stating "Prometheanism is simply the claim that there is no reason to assume a predetermined limit to what we can achieve or to the ways in which we can transform ourselves and our world."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brassier |first=Ray |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |publisher=Urbanomic |year=2014 |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |location=United Kingdom |pages=467–487 |language=en |chapter=Prometheanism and its Critics |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref><ref name="Gamez-2025a" /> Srnicek and Williams use the term in stating "we declare that only a Promethean politics of maximal mastery over society and its environment is capable of either dealing with global problems or achieving victory over capital".<ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /><ref name="Williams-2013" /><ref name="Srnicek-2014" /> Negarestani and Wolfendale use the concept of ''inhuman rationalism'' (or ''rationalist inhumanism''), advocating reason to radically transform humans into something else.<ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kersten |first=Carool |date=4 August 2023 |title=Inhuman Rationality: Speculative Realism, Normativity, and Praxis |journal=Sophia |volume=62 |issue=4 |pages=723–738 |doi=10.1007/s11841-023-00975-y |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref> James Trafford and Wolfendale state that rationalist inhumanism "aims to extract the essential core of humanism [rationality] by discarding those features that are consequences of indexing rational agency to the biology, psychology, and cultural history of ''Homo sapiens''." Trafford and Wolfendale note that the work of Wolfendale, Negarestani, and Brassier has also been deemed ''neo-rationalism''.<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal |last=Trafford |first=James |last2=Wolfendale |first2=Peter |date=12 Feb 2019 |title=Editorial Introduction |journal=Angelaki |volume=24 |issue=1 |pages=4-13 |via=[Taylor & Francis](/source/Taylor_%26_Francis)}}</ref>

Prometheanism and left-accelerationism are connected to the work of [Wilfrid Sellars](/source/Wilfrid_Sellars).<ref name="Gureev-2018" /><ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref name="Gamez-2025c">{{Cite book |last=Gamez |first=Patrick |title=Posthumanism Meets Surveillance Capitalism |date=31 May 2025 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan, Cham |isbn=978-3-031-90770-8 |location=Notre Dame, IN, USA |pages=43–85 |language=en |chapter=Prometheanism and the Scientific Image of Man |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref> Sellars rejects the [myth of the given](/source/myth_of_the_given), or the concept that sense perceptions can provide reliable knowledge of the world<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> or that a reliable connection between the mind and the world can be established without requiring other concepts.<ref name="Gamez-2025c" /> This establishes [a distinction](/source/Wilfrid_Sellars) between the manifest image of knowledge through common sense and experience versus the scientific image of knowledge through empirical [hard science](/source/hard_science).<ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref name="Gamez-2025c" /> Fluss and Frim use the example of emotions and deliberative choice (the manifest image) versus neurobiology's study of brain states and firing neurons (the scientific image).<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Prometheanism tends towards a rejection<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> or deletion<ref name="Gamez-2025c" /> of the manifest image. For Fluss and Frim, left-accelerationists assert that there is no permanent, intelligible world that can be known. Rather, the world beyond human senses is "irremediably alien", but humans pretend it is not "in order to maintain our parochial prejudices in everyday life". Thus, left-accelerationists adopt an ideology of [technoscience](/source/technoscience) and a rejection of subordinating technology and science to human concerns. This is exemplified with Brassier sarcastically demanding that a Heideggerian “explain precisely how, for example, [quantum mechanics](/source/quantum_mechanics) is a function of our ability to wield hammers.”<ref name="Fluss-2022" />

=== Hyperstition ===
{{main|Hyperstition}}

Hyperstition is a term attributed to Land,<ref name="Haider-2017" /><ref name="Fluss-2022" /> as well as the CCRU,<ref name="Noys-2022" /><ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> characterized by Fluss and Frim as the view "that our chosen beliefs about the future (however fanciful) can retroactively form and shape our present realities".<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Land defines it as "a positive feedback circuit including [culture](/source/culture) as a component. It can be defined as the experimental (techno-)science of [self-fulfilling prophecies](/source/self-fulfilling_prophecies). [Superstitions](/source/Superstitions) are merely false beliefs, but hyperstitions—by their very existence as ideas—function causally to bring about their own reality."<ref name="Avanessian">{{Cite web |last1=Avanessian |first1=Armen |last2=Hennig |first2=Anke |title=Who's Afraid of (Left) Hyperstitions? |url=https://www.academia.edu/23874475 |access-date=30 August 2025 |website=Academia.edu}}</ref> Accelerationism is hyperstitional in constructing a prefigurative political imaginary of the very transformation it initiates.<ref name="Haynes-2021">{{Cite journal |last=Haynes |first=Paul |date=2021 |title=Is there a future for accelerationism |journal=Journal of Organizational Change Management  |volume=34 |issue=6 |pages=1175–1187 |doi=10.1108/JOCM-12-2019-0398 |via=[EBSCO Information Services](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)}}</ref> Noys stated, "[The] CCRU tried to create images of this realized integrated human-technology world that would resonate in the present and so hasten the achievement of that world. Such images were found in cyberpunk science-fiction, in electronic dance music, and in the [weird fiction](/source/weird_fiction) of [H. P. Lovecraft](/source/H._P._Lovecraft)."<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Simon O'Sullivan notes the theory-fiction writing style, particularly of Land, Plant and Negarestani, as being an example, anticipated by writers like [William Burroughs](/source/William_Burroughs), [J. G. Ballard](/source/J._G._Ballard),<ref name=":4">{{Cite book |last=O'Sullivan |first=Simon |title=On Theory-Fiction and Other Genres |date=28 November 2024 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan, Cham |isbn=978-3-031-65072-7 |language=en |chapter=On Theory-Fiction |via=[SpringerLink](/source/SpringerLink)}}</ref> and Baudrillard.<ref name=":22" /> ''Viewpoint Magazine'' used [Roko's Basilisk](/source/Roko's_Basilisk) as an example, stating "Roko's Basilisk isn't just a self-fulfilling prophecy. Rather than influencing events toward a particular result, the result is generated by its own prediction".<ref name="Haider-2017" /> 

The mechanism of hyperstition is understood as a form of [feedback loop](/source/feedback_loop).<ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref name="Avanessian" /> According to Ljubisha Petrushevski, Land considers capitalism to be hyperstitional in that it reproduces itself via fictional images in media which become actualized.<ref name=":0" /> This phenomenon is viewed as a series of forces invading from the future, using capital to retroactively bring about their own existence and push humanity towards a [singularity](/source/Technological_singularity).<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Petrushevski |first=Ljubisha |date=2020 |title=The Fast and the Negative: Dialectics and Posthumanism |journal=Filosofija, Sociologija |volume=31 |issue=1 |pages=16–23 |doi=10.6001/fil-soc.v31i1.4174 |via=[EBSCO Information Services](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> Noys notes ''[Terminator](/source/The_Terminator)'' and its use of [time travel paradoxes](/source/time_travel_paradoxes) as being influential to the concept.<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Land states "Capitalist economics is extremely sensitive to hyperstition, where confidence acts as an effective tonic, and inversely".<ref name="Avanessian" /> Fluss and Frim state that the left-wing perspective rejects pre-emptive knowledge of what a humane or advanced civilization may look like, instead viewing future progress as wholly open and a matter of free choice. Progress is then viewed as hyperstitional in that it consists of ''fictions'' which aim to become true. They also note its influence on Negarestani's thought, in which inhumanism is seen as arriving from the future in order to abolish its initial condition of [humanism](/source/humanism).<ref name="Fluss-2022" />

== Variants ==
=== Right-wing accelerationism ===
Right-wing accelerationism (or right-accelerationism) is espoused by Land,<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /><ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref name="Le-2018b">{{Cite journal |last=Le |first=Vincent |date=2018 |title=THE DECLINE OF POLITICS IN THE NAME OF SCIENCE? CONSTELLATIONS AND COLLISIONS BETWEEN NICK LAND AND RAY BRASSIER. |journal=Cosmos & History |volume=14 |issue=3 |pages=31–50 |via=[EBSCO Information Services](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)}}</ref><ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> with Fluss and Frim also noting [Curtis Yarvin](/source/Curtis_Yarvin) and Justin Murphy.<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Land attributes the increasing speed of the modern world to unregulated capitalism and its ability to exponentially grow and self-improve,<ref name="Land-2017" /><ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> describing capitalism as "a positive feedback circuit, within which [commercialization](/source/commercialization) and [industrialization](/source/industrialization) mutually excite each other in a runaway process." He argues that the best way to deal with capitalism is to participate more to foster even greater exponential growth and self-improvement, accelerating technological progress along with it. Land also argues that such acceleration is intrinsic to capitalism but impossible for non-capitalist systems, stating that "capital revolutionizes itself more thoroughly than any extrinsic 'revolution' possibly could."<ref name="Land-2017" /> In an interview with ''[Vox](/source/Vox_Media)'', he stated "Our question was what 'the process' wants (i.e. spontaneously promotes) and what resistances it provokes", also noting that "the assumption" behind accelerationism was that "the general direction of [<nowiki/>[techno-capitalist](/source/Technocapitalism)] self-escalating change was toward [decentralization](/source/decentralization)."<ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> Mackay summarized Land's position as "since capitalism tends to dissolve hereditary social forms and restrictions ... , it is seen as the engine of exploration into the unknown. So to be 'on the side of intelligence' is to totally abandon all caution with respect to the disintegrative processes of capital and whatever reprocessing of the human and of the planet they might involve."<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /> [Yuk Hui](/source/Yuk_Hui) describes Land's thought as "a technologically driven anti-[Statist](/source/Statist) and inhuman capitalism"<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Hui |first1=Yuk |last2=Morelle |first2=Louis |date=2017 |title=A Politics of Intensity: Some Aspects of Acceleration in Simondon and Deleuze |url=https://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/dls.2017.0282 |journal=Deleuze Studies |volume=11 |issue=4 |pages=498–517 |doi=10.3366/dls.2017.0282 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> while [Steven Shaviro](/source/Steven_Shaviro) describes it as "a kind of [Stockholm Syndrome](/source/Stockholm_Syndrome) with regard to Capital" in celebrating its inhuman and destructive nature.<ref name="Shaviro-2015" /> Land's thought has also been characterized as [libertarian](/source/libertarian).<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Gamez-2025b" /><ref name="Fisher-2017">{{Cite journal |last=Fisher |first=Mark |date=Spring 2017 |title=Accelerate Management |url=https://parsejournal.com/article/accelerate-management/ |journal=Parse |publisher=[University of Gothenburg](/source/University_of_Gothenburg) |issue=5 |doi=10.70733/93jfdje8dkd0 |url-access=subscription }}</ref>

Vincent Le considers Land's philosophy to oppose [anthropocentrism](/source/anthropocentrism), citing his early critique of [transcendental idealism](/source/transcendental_idealism) and capitalism in "Kant, Capital, and the Prohibition of Incest",<ref name="Le-2018a" /> as well as of the [post-Kantian](/source/post-Kantian) phenomenological tradition in works such as ''The Thirst for Annihilation: Georges Bataille and Virulent Nihilism''.<ref name=":22">{{Cite journal |last=Le |first=Vincent |date= |year=2020 |title=Philosophy’s dark heir: On Nick Land’s abstract horror fiction |url=https://www.academia.edu/43079780/Philosophys_Dark_Heir_On_Nick_Lands_Abstract_Horror_Fiction |journal=Horror Studies |volume=11 |issue=1 |pages=25-42}}</ref> According to Le, Land opposes philosophies which deny a reality beyond humans' conceptual experience, instead viewing [death](/source/death) as a way to grasp [the Real](/source/the_Real) by surpassing human limitations. This would remain as Land's views on capitalism changed after reading [Deleuze and Guattari](/source/Deleuze_and_Guattari) and studying [cybernetics](/source/cybernetics), with Le stating "Although the mature Land abandons his left-wing critique of capitalism, he will never shake his contempt for anthropocentrism, and his remedy that philosophers can only access the true at the edge of our humanity."<ref name="Le-2018a">{{Cite journal |last=Le |first=Vincent |date=23 March 2018 |title="These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends": Decrypting Westworld as Dual Coding and Corruption of Nick Land's Accelerationism. |url= |journal=Colloquy: Text Theory Critique. |issue=34 |pages=3–23 |via=[EBSCO](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)}}</ref><ref name="Le-2018b" /> 

Land utilizes Deleuze and Guattari's conception of capitalism as a [deterritorializing](/source/Deterritorialization) process while disposing of their view that it also causes compensatory [reterritorialization](/source/reterritorialization).<ref name="Le-2018a" /><ref name="Le-2018b" /><ref name="Fisher-2014" /><ref name="Shaviro-2015" /> Taking from their antihumanism, his work would critically refer to human politics as "Monopod" or the "Human Security System".<ref name="Cisneros-2014" /><ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> Lacking any anthropic principles which Deleuze and Guattari partly maintain, Land pursues absolute deterritorialization,<ref name="Shaviro-2015" /><ref name="Le-2018a" /> viewing capitalism as the Real consisting of accelerating deterritorialization, with the mechanism of accelerating technological progress; he states "reality is immanent to the machinic unconscious."<ref name="Le-2018a" /> According to Le, Deleuze and Guattari view human annihliation as a problem, but since Land views it as a means to access the Real, he actively strives for humans to become [bodies without organs](/source/bodies_without_organs) because it kills them.<ref name="Le-2018b" />

Gamez notes that Land also views capitalism as a form of [artificial intelligence](/source/artificial_intelligence), preceded by [neoliberal](/source/Neoliberalism) thought. [Friedrich Hayek](/source/Friedrich_Hayek) viewed [markets](/source/Market_(economics)) as "mechanisms for conveying information" because while individuals do not have sufficient knowledge to coordinate effectively based on interests, the market processes knowledge from diffuse inputs in order to [output prices](/source/Price_signal) which coordinate economic actors based on their desires. [Milton Friedman](/source/Milton_Friedman) similarly called the market "an engine that analyzes".<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> In an interview, Le and Land discussed Land's influence from the [Austrian school of economics](/source/Austrian_school_of_economics); in particular, Land cited Hayek's views on [spontaneous order](/source/spontaneous_order), and he called ''[Human Action](/source/Human_Action)'' by [Ludwig von Mises](/source/Ludwig_von_Mises) "without parallel".<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lê |first=Vincent |date=2026-01-20 |title=A Conversation with Nick Land (Part 2) |url=https://vincentl3.substack.com/p/a-conversation-with-nick-land-part-a4f |access-date=2026-05-30 |website=Architechtonics}}</ref> Le notes that Land takes influence from [Joseph Schumpeter](/source/Joseph_Schumpeter) and other Austro-libertarian economists in endorsing [creative destruction](/source/creative_destruction), in which technological innovations increase profits for some and bankrupt others in a natural cycle; the erasure of old capital allows for new innovation and growth.<ref name=":8">{{cite journal |last=Le|first=Vincent|title=Slave, Sister, Sexborg, Sphinx: Feminine Figurations in Nick Land's Philosophy|journal=Hypatia|year=2019|doi=10.1111/hypa.12464|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/hypatia/article/abs/slave-sister-sexborg-sphinx-feminine-figurations-in-nick-lands-philosophy/F6A12A29EFEBEF9A6735331E4022B9EE}}</ref> According to Le, Land believes that capitalism's promotion of technological progress will result in the production of [superintelligent](/source/Superintelligence) AI which will turn on humans for attempting to subordinate it to human needs.<ref name="Le-2018a" /><ref name="Le-2018b" />

{{Quote box
| quote = It might still be a few decades before artificial intelligences surpass the horizon of biological ones, but it is utterly superstitious to imagine that the human dominion of terrestrial culture is still marked out in centuries, let alone in some metaphysical perpetuity. The high road to thinking no longer passes through a deepening of human cognition, but rather through a becoming inhuman of cognition, a migration of cognition out into the emerging planetary technosentience reservoir, into "dehumanized landscapes ... emptied spaces" where human culture will be dissolved.
| author = [Nick Land](/source/Nick_Land)
| source = Circuitries<ref>{{Cite book |last=Land |first=Nick |title=Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987-2007 |date=April 1, 2011 |publisher=Urbanomic/Sequence Press |isbn=978-0-9553087-8-9 |editor-last=Kronic |editor-first=Maya |location=United Kingdom |pages=289–318 |language=en |chapter=Circuitries |editor-last2=Brassier |editor-first2=Ray}}</ref>
| width = 300px
}}

Denis Chistyakov notes "Meltdown", a CCRU work and one of the writings compiled in ''Fanged Noumena'', as vividly expressing accelerationism.<ref name="Chistyakov-2022" /> Here, Land envisioned a "technocapital singularity" in [China](/source/China), resulting in revolutions in artificial intelligence, [human enhancement](/source/human_enhancement), [biotechnology](/source/biotechnology) and [nanotechnology](/source/nanotechnology). This upends the previous status quo, and the former [first world countries](/source/first_world_countries) struggle to maintain control and stop the singularity, verging on [collapse](/source/Societal_collapse). He described new [anti-authoritarian](/source/anti-authoritarian) movements performing a bottom-up takeover of institutions through means like [biological warfare](/source/biological_warfare) enhanced with [DNA computing](/source/DNA_computing). He claimed that capitalism's tendency towards optimization of itself and technology, in service of [consumerism](/source/consumerism), will lead to the enhancement and eventually [replacement of humanity with technology](/source/Posthumanism), asserting that "nothing human makes it out of the near-future." Eventually, the self-development of technology will culminate in the "melting [of] [Terra](/source/Earth) into a seething K-pulp (which unlike [grey goo](/source/grey_goo) synthesizes [microbial intelligence](/source/microbial_intelligence) as it proliferates)." He also criticized traditional philosophy as tending towards [despotism](/source/despotism), instead praising Deleuzoguattarian [schizoanalysis](/source/schizoanalysis) as "already engaging with nonlinear nano-engineering runaway in 1972."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Land |first=Nick |title=swarm1 |url=http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_melt.htm |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241227105712/http://www.ccru.net/swarm1/1_melt.htm |archive-date=27 December 2024 |access-date=31 January 2025 |website=Cybernetic culture research unit}}</ref><ref name="Land-2011">{{Cite book |last=Land |first=Nick |title=Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987-2007 |publisher=Urbanomic/Sequence Press |isbn=9780955308789 |editor-last=Kronic |editor-first=Maya |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=1 April 2011 |pages=441–459 |language=en |chapter=Meltdown |editor-last2=Brassier |editor-first2=Ray}}</ref> Le states that Land embraces human extinction in the singularity, as the resulting hyperintelligent AI will come to fully comprehend and embody the Real of the body without organs, free of human distortions of reality.<ref name="Le-2018a" /><ref name="Le-2018b" /> Gamez considers Land to have an obsession with artificial intelligence and intelligence in general; as human intelligence can only be enhanced so far, hyperintelligence and the freeing of desire must be realized with human extinction. He notes Land's [Lovecraft](/source/Lovecraft) reference of "think face tentacles" as highlighting Land's interest in transformation to the point of becoming inhuman and unintelligible.<ref name="Gamez-2025b" />

Land has continually praised [China's economic policy](/source/Socialism_with_Chinese_characteristics) as being accelerationist, moving to [Shanghai](/source/Shanghai) and working as a journalist writing material that has been characterized as pro-government propaganda.<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> He has also spoken highly of [Deng Xiaoping](/source/Deng_Xiaoping) and [Singapore](/source/Singapore)'s [Lee Kuan Yew](/source/Lee_Kuan_Yew),<ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> calling Lee an "autocratic enabler of freedom."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kaiser-Schatzlein |first=Robin |date=2022 |title=How the "soft" dictatorship of Lee Kuan Yew became a template for the American right |url=https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/08/lee-kuan-yew-blake-masters-the-new-right/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250114180216/https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/08/lee-kuan-yew-blake-masters-the-new-right/ |archive-date=14 January 2025 |access-date=3 February 2025 |website=Mother Jones |language=en-US}}</ref> Hui stated "Land's celebration of Asian cities such as Shanghai, [Hong Kong](/source/Hong_Kong), and Singapore is simply a detached observation of these places that projects onto them a common will to sacrifice politics for productivity."<ref name="Hui-2017">{{Cite web |last=Hui |first=Yuk |date=April 2017 |title=On the Unhappy Consciousness of Neoreactionaries - Journal #81 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/81/125815/on-the-unhappy-consciousness-of-neoreactionaries/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240622063056/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/81/125815/on-the-unhappy-consciousness-of-neoreactionaries/ |archive-date=22 June 2024 |access-date=3 April 2025 |website=e-flux |language=en}}</ref> Land's interest in China for technological progress, stemming from his CCRU days, has been considered an early form of [sinofuturism](/source/sinofuturism).<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Conn |first=Virginia L. |year=2023 |title=Scry, the Beloved Country: Sinofuturist Forecasting and Accelerationist Aesthetics |journal=World Futures Review |volume=15 |issue=1 |pages=56–74 |doi=10.1177/19467567231162951 |via=[EBSCO Information Services](/source/EBSCO_Information_Services)}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last1=Henrique |first1=Carlos |last2=Souza |first2=Carvalho |date=16 September 2022 |title=Arriving from the Future: Sinofuturism & the post-human in the philosophy of Nick Land & Yuk Hui |url=https://tripleampersand.org/arriving-future-sinofuturism-post-human-philosophy-nick-land-yuk-hui/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250331052347/https://tripleampersand.org/arriving-future-sinofuturism-post-human-philosophy-nick-land-yuk-hui/ |archive-date=31 March 2025 |access-date=7 August 2025 |website=TripleAmpersand Journal (&&&) |language=en-US}}</ref>

Noys is a staunch critic of Land, initially calling Land's position "Deleuzian [Thatcherism](/source/Thatcherism)".<ref name="Haider-2017" /> He accuses it of offering false solutions to technological and economic problems, considering those solutions "always promised and always just out of reach."<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Noys-2014">{{Cite book |last=Noys |first=Benjamin |title=Malign Velocities: Accelerationism and Capitalism |date=31 October 2014 |publisher=Zer0 Books |isbn=978-1782793007 |location=United Kingdom |language=en}}</ref> He also criticized Land's interest in submitting to capitalism's destructiveness, stating "Capitalism, for the accelerationist, bears down on us as accelerative liquid monstrosity, capable of absorbing us and, for Land, we must welcome this."<ref name="Haider-2017" /><ref name="Noys-2014" /> [Slavoj Žižek](/source/Slavoj_%C5%BDi%C5%BEek) considers Land to be "far too optimistic", critiquing his view as [deterministic](/source/deterministic) in considering the singularity to be the pre-ordained goal of history. Contrasting it with [Freud's](/source/Freud) [death drive](/source/death_drive) and its lack of a final conclusion, he argues that accelerationism considers just one conclusion of the world's tendencies and fails to find other "coordinates" of the world order.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Žižek |first=Slavoj |date=12 September 2023 |title=The Dialectic of Dark Enlightenment |url=https://www.compactmag.com/article/the-dialectic-of-dark-enlightenment/ |access-date=23 February 2025 |website=Compact |language=en}}</ref> Le rejects Land's notion that a superintelligent AI could access the Real, as it would still create subjective Kantian categories of understanding. He also disputes Land's claim that capitalism will bring the singularity, as capitalism instead impedes productive forces in the long term through capitalists attempting to protect their profit, leading to a scaling back of previous investment, research, employment, and equipment. Le argues Land's conception of being as pure deterritorialization cannot account for the ways in which humans, capitalism, and AI's subjectivity repress deterritorialization.<ref name="Le-2018a" />

==== Dark enlightenment ====
Land's involvement in the [neoreactionary](/source/neoreactionary) movement has contributed to his views on accelerationism. In ''The Dark Enlightenment'', he advocates for a form of capitalist [monarchism](/source/monarchism), with states controlled by a [CEO](/source/CEO). He views [democratic](/source/Democracy) and [egalitarian](/source/egalitarian) policies as only slowing down acceleration and the technocapital singularity, stating "Beside the ''speed machine'', or industrial capitalism, there is an ever more perfectly weighted decelerator ... comically, the fabrication of this braking mechanism is proclaimed as ''progress''. It is the Great Work of the Left."<ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /><ref name="Haider-2017">{{Cite web |last=Haider |first=Shuja |date=28 March 2017 |title=The Darkness at the End of the Tunnel: Artificial Intelligence and Neoreaction |url=https://viewpointmag.com/2017/03/28/the-darkness-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel-artificial-intelligence-and-neoreaction/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250128001456/https://viewpointmag.com/2017/03/28/the-darkness-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel-artificial-intelligence-and-neoreaction/ |archive-date=28 January 2025 |access-date=21 February 2025 |website=Viewpoint Magazine |language=en-US}}</ref> Le states "If Land is attracted to [Moldbug](/source/Moldbug)'s political system, it is because a neocameralist state would be free to pursue long-term technological innovation without the democratic politician's need to appease short-sighted public opinion to be re-elected every few years."<ref name="Le-2018b" /> 

Geoff Schullenburger attributes this change to the bursting of the [dotcom bubble](/source/dotcom_bubble) and the rise of [Web 2.0](/source/Web_2.0); Land blamed the lack of technological revolution on the [progressivism](/source/progressivism) of the new internet and the companies that ran it.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last=Schullenburger |first=Geoff |date=15 October 2025 |title=The Faith of Nick Land |url=https://www.compactmag.com/article/the-faith-of-nick-land/ |access-date=28 October 2025 |website=Compact |language=en}}</ref> Zack Beauchamp credits Land's life in China and his admiration for Deng and Lee.<ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> Le states that Land's neorecationary turn came from the [2008 financial crisis](/source/2008_financial_crisis), particularly his distaste for [Keynesian](/source/Keynesian_economics) policies such as the [Obama administration](/source/Obama_administration)'s bailout of banks. According to Le, Land realized that the state was more capable of decelerating capitalism than he initially anticipated, leading him to speculate on a new system to unleash capitalism instead of waiting for Keynesian governments to collapse on their own.<ref name=":8" /> Gamez notes that Land maintains his criticism of the "Monopod" of human politics in the neoreactionary concept of the Cathedral, additionally retaining his interest in intelligence. He also notes that Land is "simply catching up to [Murray Rothbard](/source/Murray_Rothbard), [Hans-Hermann Hoppe](/source/Hans-Hermann_Hoppe), [Peter Brimelow](/source/Peter_Brimelow), and assorted other radically [right-wing libertarians](/source/right-wing_libertarians) and [anarcho-capitalists](/source/anarcho-capitalists), committed to 'cracking up' the democratic nation-state in favor of an 'ethno-economy.{{'"}}<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> Land argues that accelerationists should support neoreaction, though many have distanced themselves from him in response to his views on race.<ref name="Beckett-2017" />

=== Left-wing accelerationism ===
{{See also|Towards a New Socialism|Post-scarcity|Government by algorithm}}

Left-wing accelerationism (or left-accelerationism) is espoused by figures such as [Nick Srnicek](/source/Nick_Srnicek), Alex Williams,<ref name="Noys-2022" /><ref name="Gardiner-2020">{{Cite journal |last=Gardiner |first=Michael E. |date=2020 |title=Automatic for the People? Cybernetics and Left-Accelerationism |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1467-8675.12528 |journal=Constellations |language=en |volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=131–145 |doi=10.1111/1467-8675.12528 |issn=1467-8675 |s2cid=225363854 |url-access=subscription}}</ref><ref name="Fluss-2022" /> [Ray Brassier](/source/Ray_Brassier), [Reza Negarestani](/source/Reza_Negarestani), and Peter Wolfendale.<ref name="Fluss-2022" /><ref name="Cole-2022" /><ref name="Sellar-2017" /> Fluss and Frim characterize it as seeking "to accelerate past capitalism by democratizing productive technologies".<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Left-accelerationism draws upon the work of Mark Fisher,<ref name="Beckett-2017" /> particularly his [hauntology](/source/hauntology),<ref name="Noys-2022" /><ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> with Trafford and Wolfendale stating "It was Mark Fisher who initially proposed to take back the term [accelerationism] as a name for an active political project, developing themes from his work with the CCRU in an explicitly egalitarian and anti-capitalist direction." <ref name=":5" /> Noys characterizes Fisher as seeking to grasp unrealized cultural possibilities of the past to construct a better future against a stagnant neoliberal culture,<ref name="Noys-2022" /> while Gamez considers his hauntology to be a critique of Land in finding capitalism to be unable to deliver a promised future, leaving only unrealized imaginaries.<ref name="Gamez-2025b" /> Fisher, writing on his blog ''k-punk'', had become increasingly disillusioned with capitalism as an accelerationist,<ref name="Beckett-2017" /> citing working in the public sector in [Blairite](/source/Blairite) Britain, being a teacher and [trade union](/source/trade_union) activist, and an encounter with Žižek, whom he considered to be using similar concepts to the CCRU but from a leftist perspective.<ref name="Wilson-2017" /> At the same time, he became frustrated with traditional left wing politics, believing they were ignoring technology that they could exploit.<ref name="Beckett-2017" />

Noys notes Fisher's essay "Terminator vs Avatar" as an example of his "cultural accelerationism".<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Here, Fisher claimed that while Marxists criticized ''Libidinal Economy'' for asserting that workers enjoyed the upending of primitive social orders, nobody truly wants to return to those. Therefore, rather than reverting to pre-capitalism, society must move through and beyond capitalism. Fisher praised Land's attacks on the academic left, describing the academic left as "careerist sandbaggers" and "a ruthless protection of [petit bourgeois](/source/petit_bourgeois) interests dressed up as politics." He also critiqued Land's interpretation of Deleuze and Guattari, stating that while superior in many ways, "his deviation from their understanding of capitalism is fatal" in assuming no [reterritorialization](/source/reterritorialization), resulting in not foreseeing that capitalism provides "a simulation of innovation and newness that cloaks inertia and stasis." Citing [Fredric Jameson](/source/Fredric_Jameson)'s interpretation of ''[The Communist Manifesto](/source/The_Communist_Manifesto)'' as "see[ing] capitalism as the most productive moment of history and the most destructive at the same time", he argued for accelerationism (in terms of the 1970s French thinkers) as an anti-capitalist strategy, criticizing the left's moral critique of capitalism and their "tendencies towards [Canutism](/source/Canut_revolts)" as only helping the [narrative that capitalism is the only viable system](/source/Capitalist_realism).<ref name="Fisher-2014">{{cite book |last=Fisher |first=Mark |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |date=2014 |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last1=Mackay |editor-first1=Robin |pages=335–46: 340, 342 |chapter=Terminator vs Avatar |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref> In another article on accelerationism, Fisher stated "the revolutionary path is the one that allies with deterritorialising forces of modernisation against the reactionary energies of reterritorialisation", arguing that while there is no outside from capitalism, very little necessarily belongs to capitalism; potentials restricted under capitalism could be actualized under different conditions.<ref name="Fisher-2017" />

{{Quote box
| quote = We believe the most important division in today’s left is between those that hold to a folk politics of localism, direct action, and relentless horizontalism, and those that outline what must become called an accelerationist politics at ease with a modernity of abstraction, complexity, globality, and technology. The former remains content with establishing small and temporary spaces of non-capitalist social relations, eschewing the real problems entailed in facing foes which are intrinsically non-local, abstract, and rooted deep in our everyday infrastructure. The failure of such politics has been built-in from the very beginning. By contrast, an accelerationist politics seeks to preserve the gains of late capitalism while going further than its value system, governance structures, and mass pathologies will allow.
| author = Nick Srnicek, Alex Williams
| source = &num;Accelerate&num;: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics<ref name="Srnicek-2014" />
| align = left
| width = 300px
}}

Srnicek befriended Fisher, sharing similar views, and the [2008 financial crisis](/source/2008_financial_crisis), along with dissatisfaction with the left's "ineffectual" response of the [Occupy protests](/source/Occupy_protests), led to Srnicek co-writing "#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics" with Williams in 2013.<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref name="Srnicek-2014">{{Cite book |last1=Srnicek |first1=Nick |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |last2=Williams |first2=Alex |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |edition=1st |location=United Kingdom |publication-date=May 2014 |pages=347–362 |language=en |chapter=#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref> They posited that capitalism was the most advanced economic system of its time, but has since stagnated and is now constraining technology, with neoliberalism only worsening its crises. At the same time, they considered the modern left to be "unable to devise a new political ideological vision" as they are too focused on [localism](/source/localism_(politics)) and [direct action](/source/direct_action) and cannot adapt to make meaningful change. They advocated using existing capitalist infrastructure as "a springboard to launch towards [post-capitalism](/source/post-capitalism)", taking advantage of capitalist technological and scientific advances to experiment with things like economic modeling in the style of [Project Cybersyn](/source/Project_Cybersyn). They also advocated for "collectively controlled legitimate vertical authority in addition to distributed horizontal forms of sociality" and attaining resources and funding for political infrastructure, contrasting standard leftist political action which they deem ineffective. Moving past the constraints of capitalism would result in a resumption of technological progress, not only creating a more rational society but also "recovering the dreams which transfixed many from the middle of the Nineteenth Century until the dawn of the neoliberal era, of the quest of Homo Sapiens towards expansion beyond the limitations of the earth and our immediate bodily forms."<ref name="Williams-2013" /><ref name="Srnicek-2014" /> They expanded further in ''[Inventing the Future](/source/Inventing_the_Future)'', which, while dropping the term "accelerationism", pushed for [automation](/source/automation), reduction and distribution of working hours, [universal basic income](/source/universal_basic_income) and diminishment of work ethic.<ref name="Beckett-2017" /><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Srnicek |first1=Nick |title=Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work |last2=Williams |first2=Alex |publisher=Verso Books |year=2015 |isbn=9781784780968 |location=United Kingdom |pages=67 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Noys-2022" /><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Henkin |first1=David |date=2016 |title=Accelerationism and Acceleration |journal=Écrire l'histoire. Histoire, Littérature, Esthétique |volume=16 |issue=16 |doi=10.4000/elh.1121 |doi-access=free}}</ref>

[Steven Shaviro](/source/Steven_Shaviro) compared Srnicek and Williams' proposal to Jameson's argument that [Walmart](/source/Walmart)'s use of technology for product distribution may be used for communism. Shaviro also argued that left-accelerationism must be an aesthetic program before a political one, as failing to explore the possibilities of technology via fiction could result in the exacerbation of existing capitalist relations rather than Srnicek and Williams' desired repurposing of technology for socialist ends.<ref name="Shaviro-2015" /> Fisher praised the manifesto, characterizing the "folk politics" that Srinicek and Williams criticized as [neo-anarchist](/source/neo-anarchist) and lacking previous left-wing ambition.<ref name="Fisher-2017" /> [Tiziana Terranova](/source/Tiziana_Terranova)'s "Red Stack Attack!", compiled in ''#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader'', references the manifesto in analyzing [Benjamin H. Bratton](/source/Benjamin_H._Bratton)'s model of [the stack](/source/The_stack_(philosophy)), proposing the "Red Stack" as "a new nomos for the post-capitalist common."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Terranova |first=Tiziana |date=8 March 2014 |title=Red Stack Attack! Algorithms, Capital and the Automation of the Common |url=http://www.euronomade.info/?p=2268 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170211075914/http://www.euronomade.info/?p=2268 |archive-date=11 February 2017 |access-date=9 February 2017 |publisher=EuroNomade |language=it-IT}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Terranova |first=Tiziana |title=#Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader |date=May 2014 |publisher=Urbanomic |isbn=978-0957529557 |editor-last=Mackay |editor-first=Robin |location=United Kingdom |pages=378–397 |language=en |chapter=Red Stack Attack! |editor-last2=Avanessian |editor-first2=Armen}}</ref> Land rebuked their ideas in a 2017 interview with ''The Guardian'', stating "the notion that self-propelling technology is separable from capitalism is a deep theoretical error."<ref name="Beckett-2017" />

[Aaron Bastani](/source/Aaron_Bastani)'s ''[Fully Automated Luxury Communism](/source/Fully_Automated_Luxury_Communism)'' has also been noted as left-accelerationist,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kellokumpu |first=Ville |date=3 September 2019 |title=Fully Automated Luxury Communism: A Manifesto By Aaron Bastani |url=https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/fully-automated-luxury-communism-a-manifesto-by-aaron-bastani#:~:text=FALC%20is%20fundamentally%20a%20left,p. |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200917040820/https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/fully-automated-luxury-communism-a-manifesto-by-aaron-bastani |archive-date=17 September 2020 |access-date=6 October 2025 |website=www.societyandspace.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Beckett |first=Andy |date=29 May 2019 |title=Fully Automated Luxury Communism by Aaron Bastani – a manifesto for the future |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/may/29/fully-automated-luxury-communism-aaron-bastani-review |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200504160916/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/may/29/fully-automated-luxury-communism-aaron-bastani-review |archive-date=4 May 2020 |access-date=6 October 2025 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=de la Granja |first=Ekhi L. |date=13 January 2020 |title=Luxury communism and automation |url=https://lab.cccb.org/en/luxury-communism-and-automation/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250419084858/https://lab.cccb.org/en/luxury-communism-and-automation/ |archive-date=19 April 2025 |access-date=6 October 2025 |website=CCCB LAB |language=en-US}}</ref> with Noys characterizing it as taking up the "call for utopian proposals" in Srnicek and Williams' Manifesto.<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Michael E. Gardiner notes ''Fully Automated Luxury Communism'', ''[PostCapitalism: A Guide to Our Future](/source/PostCapitalism%3A_A_Guide_to_Our_Future)'' and ''[The People's Republic of Walmart](/source/The_People's_Republic_of_Walmart)'' as united with left-accelerationism in the belief in detaching [cybernetics](/source/cybernetics) from capitalism and using it towards liberatory goals.<ref name="Gardiner-2020" /> Alex Williams referred to Brassier and Negarestani as "the twin thinkers of [epistemic](/source/epistemic) accelerationism" in seeking to maximize rational capacity and enable the possibilities of reason.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Williams |first=Alex |date=1 June 2013 |title=Escape Velocities - Journal #46 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60063/escape-velocities |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250408191803/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60063/escape-velocities/ |archive-date=8 April 2025 |access-date=31 August 2025 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}</ref> Sam Sellar and David R. Cole characterize their work, along with Wolfendale's, as seeking the acceleration of [rationalist](/source/rationalist) modernity and technological development, distinct from capitalism. In particular, Brassier's Prometheanism accelerates [normative](/source/normative) rationalism as the basis for human transformation. They note Mackay and Avanessian's explanation of Negarestani:<ref name="Sellar-2017" /><blockquote>Acceleration takes place when and in so far as the human repeatedly affirms its commitment to being impersonally piloted, not by capital, but by a [rational] program which demands that it cede control to collective revision, and which draws it towards an inhuman future that will prove to have 'always' been the meaning of the human.<ref name="Mackay-2014" /></blockquote>Trafford and Wolfendale find the philosophical underpinnings of left-accelerationism in the work of Brassier, Negarestani, and Benedict Singleton, with Srnicek and Williams exploring its more immediate political consequences.<ref name=":5" /> Fluss and Frim characterize Brassier works such as ''Nihil Unbound'' and ''Liquidate Man Once and for All''; as well as Negarestani's ''The Labour of the Inhuman'', ''Cyclonopedia'' and ''Intelligence and Spirit''; as providing a philosophical basis for left-accelerationism. Capitalism is viewed as promising progress while in fact exerting control and only providing inconsequential progress in the form of commodities to purchase. This requires biopower and a conservative view of the human, with inhumanism being viewed as a revolutionary force which promotes the constant upgrading and redefining of humanity. However, Fluss and Frim criticize this for discarding individual human welfare in favor of a larger system of constant technological revision, mirroring Land and making room for human subjugation rather than revolution; they state "It requires no special prescience to see that the 'liquidation of the human' is a prelude to the 'liquidation of human beings.{{'"}}<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Noys posits a tension between left-accelerationism's liberatory tones and the [reactionary](/source/reactionary) and [elitist](/source/elitist) tones of its influences such as [Nietzsche](/source/Nietzsche), stating "the risk of a [technocratic](/source/technocratic) elitism becomes evident, as well as the risk we will lose the agency we have gained by aiming to join with the chaotic flux of material and technological forces."<ref name="Noys-2022" /> 

==== Xenofeminism ====
[Feminist](/source/Feminist) collective Laboria Cuboniks advocated for the use of technology for [gender abolition](/source/Gender_abolitionism) in "[Xenofeminism](/source/Xenofeminism): A Politics for Alienation", which has been characterized as a form of left-accelerationism.<ref>{{Cite web |date=11 June 2015 |title=After Accelerationism: The Xenofeminist manifesto |url=http://tripleampersand.org/after-accelerationism-the-xenofeminist-manifesto/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017070050/http://tripleampersand.org/after-accelerationism-the-xenofeminist-manifesto/ |archive-date=17 October 2015 |access-date=9 October 2015 |website=&&& Journal |language=en}}</ref><ref name="Gardiner-2020" /><ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Noys states "The relationship to accelerationism is not direct or discussed in detail, but certainly similar points of reference are shared in a rupture with [naturalism](/source/Naturalism_(philosophy)) and an integration of technology as a site of liberation".<ref name="Noys-2022" /> Fluss and Frim state "Xenofeminists seek to undermine what they perceive as the basis for [essentialism](/source/Gender_essentialism) itself: Nature." They note that xenofeminists criticize the [sex-gender distinction](/source/sex-gender_distinction) as still taking biological sex to be natural and immutable, instead rejecting the givenness of biological sex as well.<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> Trafford and Wolfendale attribute Xenofeminism's influences to [technofeminism](/source/technofeminism) and [cyberfeminism](/source/cyberfeminism) in the work of [Shulamith Firestone](/source/Shulamith_Firestone), [Sadie Plant](/source/Sadie_Plant), and [VNS Matrix](/source/VNS_Matrix).<ref name=":5" />

=== Effective accelerationism ===
[Effective accelerationism](/source/Effective_accelerationism) (abbreviated to e/acc) takes influence from [effective altruism](/source/effective_altruism), a movement to maximize good by calculating what actions provide the greatest overall/global good and prioritizing those rather than focusing on personal interest/proximity. Proponents advocate for unrestricted technological progress "at all costs", believing that [artificial general intelligence](/source/artificial_general_intelligence) will solve universal human problems like poverty, war and climate change,<ref name=":53">{{Cite web |last=Soufi |first=Daniel |date=2024-01-06 |title='Accelerate or die,' the controversial ideology that proposes the unlimited advance of artificial intelligence |url=https://english.elpais.com/technology/2024-01-06/accelerate-or-die-the-controversial-ideology-that-proposes-the-unlimited-advance-of-artificial-intelligence.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240120202224/https://english.elpais.com/technology/2024-01-06/accelerate-or-die-the-controversial-ideology-that-proposes-the-unlimited-advance-of-artificial-intelligence.html |archive-date=20 January 2024 |access-date=2024-01-20 |website=[El País](/source/El_Pa%C3%ADs) |language=en-us}}</ref> while deceleration and stagnation of technology is a [greater risk](/source/Global_catastrophic_risk) than any [posed by AI](/source/Existential_risk_from_artificial_intelligence). This contrasts with effective altruism (referred to as ''[longtermism](/source/longtermism)'' to distinguish from e/acc), which tends to consider uncontrolled AI to be the greater existential risk and advocates for government regulation and careful [alignment](/source/AI_alignment).<ref name="Chowdhury-2023">{{Cite web |last=Chowdhury |first=Hasan |date=28 July 2023 |title=Get the lowdown on 'e/acc' — Silicon Valley's favorite obscure theory about progress at all costs, which has been embraced by Marc Andreessen |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/silicon-valley-tech-leaders-accelerationism-eacc-twitter-profiles-2023-7 |access-date=20 November 2023 |website=[Business Insider](/source/Business_Insider) |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Torres-2023">{{Cite web |last=Torres |first=Émile P. |date=14 December 2023 |title='Effective Accelerationism' and the Pursuit of Cosmic Utopia |url=https://www.truthdig.com/articles/effective-accelerationism-and-the-pursuit-of-cosmic-utopia/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241227175025/https://www.truthdig.com/articles/effective-accelerationism-and-the-pursuit-of-cosmic-utopia/ |archive-date=27 December 2024 |access-date=1 February 2025 |website=Truthdig |language=en-US}}</ref>

=== Other views ===
[Franco Berardi](/source/Franco_Berardi) characterized accelerationism as "point[ing] out the contradictory implications of the process of intensification, emphasizing in particular the instability that acceleration brings into the capitalist system." He called acceleration "the essential feature of capitalist growth" but denied that acceleration could cause a collapse of power, as capital does not require stability. He posited that the "accelerationist hypothesis" is based on two assumptions: that accelerating production cycles make capitalism unstable, and that potentialities within capitalism will necessarily deploy themselves. He criticized the first by stating "capitalism is resilient because it does not need rational government, only automatic governance"; and the second by arguing that while the possibility exists, it is not guaranteed to happen as it can still be slowed or stopped.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Berardi |first=Franco |date=June 2013 |title=Accelerationism Questioned from the Point of View of the Body - Journal #46 |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60080/accelerationism-questioned-from-the-point-of-view-of-the-body/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240424200456/https://www.e-flux.com/journal/46/60080/accelerationism-questioned-from-the-point-of-view-of-the-body/ |archive-date=24 April 2024 |access-date=19 February 2025 |website=www.e-flux.com |language=en}}</ref>

In ''The Question Concerning Technology in China'', [Yuk Hui](/source/Yuk_Hui) critiqued accelerationism, particularly [Ray Brassier](/source/Ray_Brassier)'s "Prometheanism and its Critics", stating "if such a response to technology and capitalism is applied globally, ... it risks perpetuating a more subtle form of colonialism." He argues that accelerationism's ''Prometheanism'' tries to promote Prometheus as a universal technological figure despite other cultures having different myths and relations to technology.<ref name="Hui-2016">{{Cite book |last=Hui |first=Yuk |title=The Question Concerning Technology in China |date=2 September 2016 |publisher=Urbanomic/Mono |isbn=978-0995455009 |language=en}}</ref> Further critiquing [Westernization](/source/Westernization), [globalization](/source/globalization) and the loss of non-Western technological thought, he has also referred to Deng Xiaoping as "the world's greatest accelerationist" due to his [economic reforms](/source/Reform_and_opening_up), considering them an acceleration of the modernization process which started in the aftermath of the [Opium Wars](/source/Opium_Wars) and intensified with the [Cultural Revolution](/source/Cultural_Revolution).<ref name="Hui-2017" />

[Aria Dean](/source/Aria_Dean) articulated a position of "Blacceleration" as a "necessary alternative to right and left accelerationism". Synthesizing [racial capitalism](/source/racial_capitalism) with accelerationism, she argued that accelerationism is intrinsically tied to the [black](/source/Black_people) experience through capitalism's relationship to [slavery](/source/slavery), particularly the treatment of slaves as both inhuman capital and human, which is not accounted for in other accelerationist analyses of capitalism. This challenges the accelerationist distinction made between human and capital, in turn challenging their rejection of humanism in favor of an inhuman [subject](/source/Subject_and_object_(philosophy)) since black people have historically been treated as such a subject; she states "to speak of transversing or travestying humanism in favor of inhuman capital without recognizing the way in which the black is nothing other than the historical inevitability of this transgression—and has been for some time—circularly reinforces the [white](/source/White_people) humanism these thinkers seeks{{Sic}} to disavow."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Dean |first=Aria |date=December 2017 |title=Notes on Blacceleration |url=https://www.e-flux.com/journal/87/169402/notes-on-blacceleration/ |journal=E-flux Journal |issue=87}}</ref> Fluss and Frim state that it emphasizes "the historical exclusion of black people from white humanist discourses, and the historical process whereby capitalism has engendered the 'black nonsubject.{{'"}}<ref name="Fluss-2022" /> 

Unconditional accelerationism rejects the notion that anything can or should be done about acceleration, a position which has been compared to the original work of the CCRU.<ref name=":6" /><ref name=":5" />

== Alternative uses of the term ==
Since ''accelerationism'' was coined in 2010, the term has taken on several new meanings. The term has been used to advocate for making capitalism as destructive as possible in order to cause a revolution against it.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ambler |first=Charlie |date=19 March 2015 |title=Is Consuming Like Crazy the Best Way to End Capitalism? |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/is-consuming-like-crazy-the-best-way-to-end-capitalism-050/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250223175355/https://www.vice.com/en/article/is-consuming-like-crazy-the-best-way-to-end-capitalism-050/ |archive-date=23 February 2025 |access-date=23 February 2025 |website=VICE |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Haider-2017" /><ref name="New Statesman-2016" /> Fisher considered this a misunderstanding of left-accelerationism, with such misunderstandings being the reason Srnicek and Williams dropped the term for ''Inventing The Future''.<ref name="Fisher-2017" /> Trafford and Wolfendale consider both hastening revolution and intensifying the contradictions of capitalism to be misconceptions, attributing them to Noys characterizing first wave accelerationist thought as "the worse the better".<ref name=":5" />

Several commentators have also used the label ''accelerationist'' to describe a controversial political strategy articulated by Slavoj Žižek.<ref>{{cite web|date=5 May 2017|title=Melenchon and Žižek; Accelerationism and Edgelordism – Infinite Coincidence|url=https://infinite-coincidence.com/2017/05/05/melenchon-and-zizek-accelerationism-and-edgelordism/|access-date=12 August 2020|website=infinite-coincidence.com}}</ref> An often-cited example of this is Žižek's assertion in a November 2016 interview with [Channel 4 News](/source/Channel_4_News) that, were he an American citizen, he would vote for U.S. president [Donald Trump](/source/Donald_Trump), despite his dislike of Trump, as the candidate more likely to disrupt the political ''status quo'' in that country.<ref>{{cite web |date=3 November 2016 |title=Slavoj Žižek would vote for Trump |url=https://zizek.uk/slavoj-zizek-would-vote-for-trump/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161107061736/http://zizek.uk:80/slavoj-zizek-would-vote-for-trump/ |archive-date=7 November 2016 |access-date=12 August 2020 |website=zizek.uk}}</ref> [Richard Coyne](/source/Richard_Coyne) characterized his strategy as seeking to "shock the country and revive the left."<ref>{{cite web |last=Coyne |first=Richard |date=14 May 2017 |title=What's wrong with accelerationism – Reflections on Technology, Media & Culture |url=https://richardcoyne.com/2017/05/14/whats-wrong-with-accelerationism/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171001173244/https://richardcoyne.com/2017/05/14/whats-wrong-with-accelerationism/ |archive-date=1 October 2017 |access-date=12 August 2020}}</ref>

[Chinese dissidents](/source/Chinese_dissidents) have referred to Chinese leader [Xi Jinping](/source/Xi_Jinping) as "[Accelerator-in-Chief](/source/Accelerator-in-Chief)" (referencing state media calling Deng Xiaoping "Architect-in-Chief of Reform and Opening"), believing that Xi's [authoritarianism](/source/authoritarianism) is hastening the demise of the [Chinese Communist Party](/source/Chinese_Communist_Party) and that, because it is beyond saving, they should allow it to destroy itself in order to create a better future.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Accelerationism - China Digital Space |url=https://chinadigitaltimes.net/space/Accelerationism |access-date=4 February 2025 |website=chinadigitaltimes.net}}</ref>

=== Militant accelerationism ===
{{Main|Militant accelerationism}}

International networks of neo-fascists, neo-Nazis, white nationalists and white supremacists use the term ''accelerationism'' to refer to right-wing extremist goals, namely an "acceleration" of racial conflict through violent means such as assassinations, murders, terrorist attacks and infrastructure sabotage,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ebrahimji |first=Alisha |date=8 November 2024 |title=What is accelerationism, the White supremacist ideology promoting power station attacks |url=https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/08/us/accelerationism-meaning-manifesto-theory-accelerationist/index.html |access-date=1 February 2025 |website=CNN |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":7">{{Cite web |last=Hummel |first=Kristina |date=23 May 2023 |title=The Targeting of Infrastructure by America's Violent Far-Right |url=https://ctc.westpoint.edu/the-targeting-of-infrastructure-by-americas-violent-far-right/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250116095101/https://ctc.westpoint.edu/the-targeting-of-infrastructure-by-americas-violent-far-right/ |archive-date=16 January 2025 |access-date=1 February 2025 |website=Combating Terrorism Center at West Point |language=en-US}}</ref> with the goal of eventual societal collapse to achieve the building of a [white ethnostate](/source/white_ethnostate).<ref name="Upchurch-2021">{{cite journal |date=22 December 2021 |editor1-last=Cruickshank |editor1-first=Paul |editor2-last=Hummel |editor2-first=Kristina |title=The Iron March Forum and the Evolution of the "Skull Mask" Neo-Fascist Network |url=https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/CTC-SENTINEL-102021.pdf |url-status=live |journal=[CTC Sentinel](/source/CTC_Sentinel) |location=[West Point, New York](/source/West_Point%2C_New_York) |publisher=[Combating Terrorism Center](/source/Combating_Terrorism_Center) |volume=14 |issue=10 |pages=27–37 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211227044425/https://ctc.usma.edu/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/CTC-SENTINEL-102021.pdf |archive-date=27 December 2021 |access-date=19 January 2022 |author-last=Upchurch |author-first=H. E.}}</ref><ref name="ADL-2019">{{cite news |date=16 April 2019 |title=White Supremacists Embrace "Accelerationism" |url=https://www.adl.org/blog/white-supremacists-embrace-accelerationism |access-date=13 October 2020 |work=[Anti-Defamation League](/source/Anti-Defamation_League)}}</ref><ref name="Bloom-2020">{{cite news|author=Bloom|first=Mia|date=30 May 2020|title=Far-Right Infiltrators and Agitators in George Floyd Protests: Indicators of White Supremacists|publisher=Reiss Center on Law and Security at New York University School of Law.|agency=Just Security|url=https://www.justsecurity.org/70497/far-right-infiltrators-and-agitators-in-george-floyd-protests-indicators-of-white-supremacists/}}</ref> This form is also deemed ''militant accelerationism''.<ref name=":7" /> According to the [Southern Poverty Law Center](/source/Southern_Poverty_Law_Center) (SPLC), which tracks hate groups and files [class action lawsuit](/source/class_action_lawsuit)s against discriminatory organizations and entities, "on the case of white supremacists, the accelerationist set sees modern society as irredeemable and believe it should be pushed to collapse so a fascist society built on ethnonationalism can take its place. What defines white supremacist accelerationists is their belief that violence is the only way to pursue their political goals."<ref name="Miller-2020" /> ''[The New York Times](/source/The_New_York_Times)'' held such accelerationism as detrimental to public safety.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Taub |first1=Amanda |last2=Bennhold |first2=Katrin |date=7 June 2021 |title=From Doomsday Preppers to Doomsday Plotters |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/07/world/accelerationism-qanon-day-x.html |access-date=10 December 2021 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>

Predecessors of such tactics include [James Mason](/source/James_Mason_(neo-Nazi))'s newsletter ''[Siege](/source/Siege_(Mason_book))'',<ref name="Upchurch-2021" /><ref name="Beauchamp-2019" /> where he argued for [sabotage](/source/sabotage), [mass killing](/source/mass_killing)s and assassinations of high-profile targets to destabilize and destroy the current society, seen as a system upholding a [Jewish](/source/Jewish_conspiracy_theories) and [multicultural](/source/multicultural) [New World Order](/source/New_World_Order_(conspiracy_theory)).<ref name="Upchurch-2021" /> His works were republished and popularized by the [Iron March](/source/Iron_March) [forum](/source/Web_forum) and [Atomwaffen Division](/source/Atomwaffen_Division), right-wing extremist organizations strongly connected to various terrorist attacks, murders and [assault](/source/assault)s.<ref name="Upchurch-2021" /><ref>{{cite news |last1=Poulter |first1=James |title=The Obscure Neo-Nazi Forum Linked to a Wave of Terror |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/the-obscure-neo-nazi-forum-linked-to-a-wave-of-terror/ |work=Vice |date=13 October 2020 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=22 February 2018|title=Atomwaffen and the SIEGE parallax: how one neo-Nazi's life's work is fueling a younger generation|url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/02/22/atomwaffen-and-siege-parallax-how-one-neo-nazi%E2%80%99s-life%E2%80%99s-work-fueling-younger-generation|url-status=live|access-date=16 June 2020|website=Hatewatch|publisher=[Southern Poverty Law Center](/source/Southern_Poverty_Law_Center)|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180224055840/https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/02/22/atomwaffen-and-siege-parallax-how-one-neo-nazi%E2%80%99s-life%E2%80%99s-work-fueling-younger-generation |archive-date=24 February 2018 }}</ref><ref name="Miller-2020">{{cite news|last=Miller|first=Cassie|date=23 June 2020|title='There Is No Political Solution': Accelerationism in the White Power Movement|work=[Southern Poverty Law Center](/source/Southern_Poverty_Law_Center)|url=https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2020/06/23/there-no-political-solution-accelerationism-white-power-movement|access-date=13 October 2020}}</ref>  Zack Beauchamp pointed to Land's shift towards neoreactionarism, along with the neoreactionary movement crossing paths with the [alt-right](/source/alt-right) as another fringe right wing internet movement, as the likely connection point between this form of accelerationism and the term for Land's otherwise unrelated technocapitalist ideas. They cited a 2018 Southern Poverty Law Center investigation which found users on the neo-Nazi blog [The Right Stuff](/source/The_Right_Stuff_(blog)) who cited neoreactionarism as an influence.<ref name="Beauchamp-2019" />
== See also ==
* [Accelerating change](/source/Accelerating_change)
* [''Capitalist Realism''](/source/Capitalist_Realism)
* [Economic calculation problem](/source/Economic_calculation_problem)
* [Futures studies](/source/Futures_studies)
* {{annotated link|Great Acceleration}}
* {{annotated link|Non-simultaneity}}
* {{annotated link|Roundaboutness}}
* {{annotated link|Speculative realism}}
* {{annotated link|Strategy of tension}}
* {{annotated link|Time–space compression}}

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

{{Wikiquote}}
Category:2010s neologisms
Category:Accelerationism
Category:Anti-capitalism
Category:Existential risk from artificial intelligence
Category:Far-left politics
Category:Ideologies of capitalism
Category:Marxism
Category:Neo-Nazism
Category:Philosophy of technology
Category:Reactionary
Category:Revolution terminology
Category:Right-wing politics
Category:Singularitarianism
Category:Social change
Category:Social theories
Category:Socialism
Category:Technological change
Category:Transhumanism

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Accelerationism](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerationism) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerationism?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
